Sep 2015 — Sir Ken Robinson Opens Up About Learning A noted author, educator and
cultural critic discusses the benefits of Personalized Education, The Independent School Magazine (NAIS)
Not exact matches
In clean, bright, and provocative language, a
cultural critic and historian
discusses trends in art, literature, music, and history over the past five centuries.
We
discuss, among other topics, about photography in the Middle East with Peggy Sue Amison, artistic director at East Wing; net art and networked cultures with Josephine Bosma, Amsterdam - based journalist and
critic; urban digital art and criticality in the media city with curator and researcher Tanya Toft; art and technology with curator Chris Romero; the politics of surveillance and international security with political scientist David Barnard - Wills; art and architecture with Maaike Lauwaert, visual arts curator at Stroom, an independent centre for art and architecture in the Netherlands; the intersections of art, law and science with curator and
cultural manager Daniela Silvestrin; the architecture of sacred places with curator Jumana Ghouth; the historical legacy of feminism today with Betty Tompkins and Marilyn Minter; hacktivism and net culture with curator and researcher Tatiana Bazzichelli; culture, place and memory with Norie Neumark, director of the Centre for Creative Arts in Melbourne; anthropology and the tactical use of post-digital technologies with artist and philosopher Mitra Azar; or feminism and the digital arts with curator Tina Sauerländer.
In this illuminating interview with the German
cultural critic Diedrich Diederichsen excerpted from Phaidon's monograph Isa Genzken, the groundbreaking artist
discusses the sometimes unlikely sources of her inspiration.
The Creative Time Summit is a conference that brings together
cultural producers — including artists,
critics, writers, and curators — to
discuss how their work engages pressing issues affecting our world.
We will read and
discuss inspiring essays by artists and
critics, such as the great film editor Walter Murch,
cultural critic Camille Paglia, the novelists James Baldwin and Tom Wolfe, and art grandee Dave Hickey, along with the crackling prose of artist - eccentrics such as William Blake, Vincent van Gogh and Andy Warhol.
We will draw upon the views of contemporary
critics, novelists and artists, and
discuss the notion of
cultural relativity and the modern artist's affinity for so - called «primitive» art.
German art
critic and editor Isabelle Graw
discusses with the artist his aesthetic and symbolic strategies in the
cultural contexts of America and Europe.
In October's inaugural installment of «Close Encounters,»
critic and art historian Douglas Crimp
discusses his new book, Before Pictures (Dancing Foxes Press, Co-published with University of Chicago Press, 2016), a hybrid of memoir and
cultural history about his life in 1970s New York.